Admissions officers live a dual, often conflicted, existence. In one sense, they are counselors responsible for advising prospective students. In another sense, they are salespeople with obligations to meet enrollment goals. The pressures fostered by these roles sometimes prompt unscrupulous individuals to use misrepresentations and other forms of deception to induce students to enroll. Unfortunately, students who are induced to enroll based on recruitment deception are afforded few options for redress. The purpose of this Article is to conceptualize a tort-based solution to this utter inequity. The Article proposes a broadening of negligent misrepresentation to encompass a new tort—negligent educational recruitment. This tort would employ ...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
This article focuses on misrepresentation and the exposure of universities to legal liability for in...
This intriguing Article by David Gray Carlson addresses the trend of bankruptcy trustees suing unive...
This intriguing Article by David Gray Carlson addresses the trend of bankruptcy trustees suing unive...
For decades, for-profit colleges throughout the United States have exploited their students through ...
This article focuses on misrepresentation and the exposure of universities to legal liability for in...
Since I began circulating drafts of an article arguing that certain law school officials have expose...
This article argues for stricter regulation of proprietary (for-profit) school marketing and recruit...
This article argues for stricter regulation of proprietary (for-profit) school marketing and recruit...
Throughout the United States, college enrollment has overwhelmingly increased, reaching its peak in ...
This Article considers whether denial of a cause of action for educational malpractice is consistent...
Law schools have misled prospective students for years about the value of legal education. In some c...
‘Contract cheating’, whereby students pay companies to complete assignments on their behalf, threate...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
This article focuses on misrepresentation and the exposure of universities to legal liability for in...
This intriguing Article by David Gray Carlson addresses the trend of bankruptcy trustees suing unive...
This intriguing Article by David Gray Carlson addresses the trend of bankruptcy trustees suing unive...
For decades, for-profit colleges throughout the United States have exploited their students through ...
This article focuses on misrepresentation and the exposure of universities to legal liability for in...
Since I began circulating drafts of an article arguing that certain law school officials have expose...
This article argues for stricter regulation of proprietary (for-profit) school marketing and recruit...
This article argues for stricter regulation of proprietary (for-profit) school marketing and recruit...
Throughout the United States, college enrollment has overwhelmingly increased, reaching its peak in ...
This Article considers whether denial of a cause of action for educational malpractice is consistent...
Law schools have misled prospective students for years about the value of legal education. In some c...
‘Contract cheating’, whereby students pay companies to complete assignments on their behalf, threate...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...
Law suits by students against colleges and universities are not a new phenomenon; case decisions hav...